One
cell that undergoes meiosis will yield how many independent cells?

(A)

1

(B)

2

(C)

3

(D)

4

(E)

5

3.

In
which generation of a monohybrid cross do all the individuals look
the same?

(A)

Parental

(B)

F1

(C)

F2

(D)

F3

(E)

F4

4.

In
a monohybrid cross, the two parental genotypes are AA and aa. The
genotype of all F1 plants
is Aa. If the F1 plants
are crossed to get an F1 generation,
what percentage of the F2 generation
will have the dominant phenotype?

(A)

0%

(B)

25%

(C)

50%

(D)

75%

(E)

100%

5.

You
are performing a dihybrid cross with two traits encoded by two different
genes. These genes are on two different chromosomes and follow the
law of independent assortment. The two parental genotypes are AABB
and aabb. The genotype of all F1 plants
is AaBb. What phenotype ratio will you observe in the F2 generation?

(A)

8:4:2:1

(B)

1:1:1:1

(C)

4:2:2:1

(D)

1:2:2:1

(E)

9:3:3:1

6.

A
scientist is studying the inheritance of two traits: stem height
and stem color. Tall is dominant over short; brown is dominant over
green. The scientist wants to do a test cross to determine the genotype of
a tall, brown F1 hybrid
individual. What will be the height and color of the other plant
he uses in this test cross?

(A)

Tall and brown

(B)

Tall and green

(C)

Short and brown

(D)

Short and green

(E)

It doesn’t matter; any of the above will work.

7.

You
are studying the inheritance of stem height and stem color. For
height, the tall phenotype is dominant over short; for color, the
brown phenotype is dominant over green. You mate a purebred tall, brown
plant to a purebred short, green plant and all of the F1 offspring
are tall and brown. You then mate two of these F1 hybrid
offspring together, and you count the following phenotypes in their F2 offspring:
61 tall and brown, 1 tall and green, 2 short and brown, and 18 short
and green. Which of the following is probably true?

(A)

The two genes controlling these traits are sex linked.

(B)

The two genes controlling these traits might be on different
chromosomes.

(C)

The two genes controlling these traits are linked with
no crossing over.

(D)

The two genes controlling these traits are nearby on the
same chromosome.

(E)

The two genes controlling these traits are far apart on
the same chromosome.

8.

Which
of the following is usually NOT true of an autosomal recessive disease?

(A)

Most people with the disease have parents who do not have
the disease.

(B)

An equal number of males and females get the disease.

(C)

If both parents have the disease, 50% of their offspring
will have the disease.

(D)

If both parents are heterozygous, 75% of their children
will not get the disease.

(E)

The genes for the disease are not located on the sex chromosomes.

9.

A
woman who is a heterozygous carrier of the hemophilia allele marries
a man who has hemophilia. What percentage of their female children
would you expect to have hemophilia?

(A)

0%

(B)

25%

(C)

50%

(D)

75%

(E)

100%

10.

A
boy with red-green color blindness (an X-linked recessive condition)
has a color-blind father and a mother who is not color blind. From
which parent did the boy inherit his color blindness?